Green
Jobs Act of 2007
by Van Jones
There
has been a lot of discussion about the Energy Package that is set
to pass the U.S. House this week. But the media so far has missed
one of the most interesting and innovative proposals that will be
voted on: the Green Jobs Act of 2007.
This
ground-breaking legislation will make $120 million a year available
across the country to begin training workers (and would-be workers)
for jobs in the clean energy sector. When the bill becomes law,
35,000 people a year will benefit from cutting edge, vocational
education in fields that could literally save the Earth.
Lofty as that sounds, the Green Jobs Act is responding smartly to
an important, practical need. To beat global warming and meet the
energy challenges of the future, the United States will need hundreds
of thousands of “green-collar workers.” Such workers
will be needed to install millions of solar panels; weatherize homes
and other buildings; create a sufficient quantity of bio-fuels;
build and maintain wind-farms and much, much more. Without these
workers, the country will not have the working muscle and hands-on
smarts to change our trajectory and fashion a different future.
There
is an added bonus found in creating a strong, green-collar workforce:
these energy-saving, air-quality-improving, carbon-cutting jobs
can do more than just save the planet or help avoid oil wars in
the future. For tens of thousands of Americans who are falling behind
in the global job market, these work opportunities can also create
“green pathways out of poverty.”
At
their best, green-collar jobs offer living wages and upward mobility
— in growth industries. And most of these jobs simply cannot
be outsourced to other countries. The reason is simple: the solar
panels and wind farms must be constructed here in the United States,
not overseas. And the millions and millions of buildings that need
to be retrofitted to save more energy cannot be shipped over to
China. They all must be weatherized where they stand — right
here in the United States.
Therefore, green-collar jobs can provide secure employment for U.S.
workers.
The key is to make sure that those people who most need the jobs
— urban youth, returning veterans, struggling farmers, displaced
workers from our manufacturing sectors — can get all the training
they need to fill those posts.
Unfortunately, so far, the United States has no coherent strategy
for training enough workers to meet the growing labor demand in
the green and clean energy sectors.
Enter
U.S. Rep. Hilda Solis (D-CA) and U.S. Rep. John Tierney (D-MASS),
who introduced the Green Jobs Act of 2007. They have championed,
with great passion and skill, the cause of helping a broad cross-section
of workers get in on the ground floor of these growing industries.
And they have also worked to include some support for those trainees
who may have barriers to employment (like a limited prior education,
a history of incarceration or children to support). By so doing,
they have designed the Act such that those job training dollars
can fight poverty and pollution at the same time.
Credit for the Green Jobs Act must also go to Rep. Markee (D-MASS),
who chaired Pelosi’s select committee on climate change and
energy independence. He also has been a passionate advocate for
training the U.S. workforce of a cleaner, greener future.
But
behind the scenes, it has been Speaker Nancy Pelosi herself who
has made “green workforce development” a priority in
her environmental agenda. She knows that we cannot have a successful
clean energy economy without a strong supply of well-trained clean
energy workers.
And
she also sees the opportunity to move ecological solutions from
being elite fetishes (hybrid cars, organic cuisine) to the basis
of a massive economic engine, benefiting everyday American workers.
Pelosi made it clear in a recent speech at Take Back America: she
is committed to ensuring that the benefits of a cleaner, greener
economy are shared broadly — including by the nation’s
poor.
The
Speaker is the first national leader — and the highest-ranking
person in the U.S. government — to find a practical way to
advance “green-collar jobs” as a cornerstone for the
clean-energy revolution. She deserves due credit.
So do the numerous advocacy organizations that have worked hard
to get the legislation passed, including the Ella Baker Center for
Human Rights (where I work), the National Apollo Alliance, the Center
for American Progress, the Workforce Alliance, Color Of Change,
and others. (For more information — and for ways to support
the bill — see below.)
I
just hope that this piece of legislation represents the tiny, first
step in a massive effort. To avert ecological and social catastrophe,
we must build a green economy that is strong enough to lift people
out of poverty.
We
must take smart steps to help ensure that those communities that
were locked OUT of the pollution-based economy are locked INTO the
clean, green economy. As environmental leader Majora Carter often
says, the nation should invest billions of dollars into “greening
the ghetto.” The return in energy savings would be enormous;
and the return in lives saved from violence and would be incalculable.
If
we focus on practical steps to accelerate job-creation in the green
economy, we can save the polar bears — and the poor kids,
too. Speaker Nancy Pelosi believes that to be true. So do Solis,
Tierney and Markee.
This week, we will see if the other members of the House of Representatives
agree with them.
http://www.ellabakercenter.org/page.php?pageid=82&contentid=289
This entry was posted on Friday, August
|